Of Chinese American heritage, Chao was born in Syosset, New York, and grew up in Harrison, New York.[2] Her father was James S. C. Chao, who founded Foremost Group in 1964.[3] Her mother was Ruth Mulan Chu Chao.[4] She was the youngest of six sisters, one of whom is Elaine Chao, former US Secretary of Transportation.[5] Her parents were born in mainland China, but fled to Taiwan in 1949 due to the Chinese Civil War. Her father came to the United States in 1958, while her mother and three oldest sisters moved to the United States in 1961.[2][4][6] At the age of nine, Chao began joining her father on ship visits.[3][7]
Chao went to Harvard for her undergraduate degree, which she completed in three years, graduating magna cum laude with a degree in economics in 1994.[2][8] She went on to receive her MBA from Harvard Business School.[3]
Career
Chao worked in mergers and acquisitions at Smith Barney, now a part of Morgan Stanley. She joined their family business Foremost Group in 1996,[2] where she succeeded her father as CEO in 2018.[3] Foremost Group operates a global fleet of bulk carriers. As CEO, she became interested in adding more environmentally sustainable vessels that can burn alternative fuels to the company's roster.[2]
Chao married Bruce Wasserstein in January 2009,[11] before his death in October of that year. She married Jim Breyer in 2012;[2] the couple had a son three years prior to her death.[2][3] Chao and Breyer had moved to the Austin area during the COVID-19 pandemic. They bought a mansion in downtown Austin and a ranch in Johnson City. They had previously split their time between New York City and San Francisco, but before their son was born, they decided to raise him in Austin.[8]
Death
On the evening of February 10, 2024, Chao was celebrating the Lunar New Year with friends at her Johnson City ranch.[12] As her guests began going home, she got into her Tesla Model X and accidentally backed into a pond. The car began sinking, and Chao was unable to open her door or break the glass as the car filled with water. Chao was on the phone for eight minutes as the car sank, from around 11:42 to 11:50 p.m., telling her friend she was going to die.[12] Onlookers called 911 and attempted to help. Blanco County emergency personnel arrived around midnight and tried to enter the car.[12] A deputy broke the driver's door window and went underwater where he found Chao and dragged her to shore. EMS workers were unable to revive her, and she was pronounced dead at 1:40 a.m. on February 11; she was 50 years old.[12] A March 2024 police investigation concluded that Chao's blood alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit and that her death was the result of an accident.[12][8][13][2][14]